After the Debian Wheezy armel image I made a new one based on Raspbian armhf. This one is compiled with hard float support, so basically floating point operations are MUCH faster because they are done in hardware instead of software emulation
Features include:
- A minimal Raspbian Wheezy installation (similar to a netinstall)
- Hard Float binaries: floating point operations are done in hardware instead of software emulation, that means higher performances
- Disabled incremental updates, means apt-get update is much faster
- Workaround for a kernel bug which hangs the Raspberry Pi under heavy network/disk loads
- 3.6.11+ hardfp kernel with latest raspberry pi patches
- Latest version of the firmwares
- Fits 1GB SD cards
- A very tiny 118MB image: even with a 2GB SD there is a lot of free space
- ssh starts by default
- The clock is automatically updated using ntp
- IPv6 support
- Just 14MB of ram usage after the boot
Here is the link to download my custom image:
http://files2.linuxsystems.it/raspbian_wheezy_20140726.img.7z – London, UK
Checksum MD5: 1be9af7fcec38c7238229edf1c5cdb3c
Mirrors:
7zip: md5sum(1be9af7fcec38c7238229edf1c5cdb3c) – File size: 144MB
http://mirrors.node1.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20140726.img.7z – Amsterdam, Netherlands (1)
https://debianer.puppis.uberspace.de/files/RaspberryPi/raspbian_wheezy_hardfp_20140726.img.7z – Frankfurt, Germany
You will have to extract the image with p7zip:
7za x raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.7z
Then flash it to your SD with dd:
dd bs=1M if=raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img of=/dev/sdX
Finally, if you have an sd larger than 1GB, grow the partition with gparted (first move the swap partition at the end).
The root password is raspberry.
You will have to reconfigure your timezone after the first boot:
dpkg-reconfigure tzdata
The keyboard layout:
dpkg-reconfigure console-data
And the localization:
dpkg-reconfigure locales
It’s done, I hope you will enjoy it.
I´ve setup another mirror for the images:
https://debianer.puppis.uberspace.de/files/RaspberryPi/raspbian_wheezy_hardfp_20130923.img.7z – Frankfurt, Germany
https://debianer.puppis.uberspace.de/files/RaspberryPi/raspbian_wheezy_softfp_20120608.img.7z – Frankfurt, Germany
Ping me, if there are any updates 😉
Thanks
That reminds me! I accidentally took your mirrors down a while ago. Please wait whilst I update them for you.
I noticed that you were getting complaints about compression formats, so I’ve taken the liberty of recompressing them myself in two other formats.
7zip: md5sum(e5b0d40f47a1fc2e4c2b80c99af538be) – File size: 118MB
http://mirrors.node1.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.7z – Amsterdam, Netherlands (1)
http://mirrors.node2.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.7z – New York, United States
http://mirrors.node3.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.7z – Amsterdam, Netherlands (2)
http://mirrors.node4.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.7z – Dublin, Ireland
GZip: md5sum(a7c57e16acefa08f80bc8b862da7dfed) – File size: 164MB
http://mirrors.node1.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.tar.gz – Amsterdam, Netherlands (1)
http://mirrors.node2.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.tar.gz – New York, United States
http://mirrors.node3.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.tar.gz – Amsterdam, Netherlands (2)
http://mirrors.node4.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.tar.gz – Dublin, Ireland
GZip: md5sum(9b7a0a1428a7d493a456685b296afecb) – File size: 164MB
http://mirrors.node1.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.zip – Amsterdam, Netherlands (1)
http://mirrors.node2.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.zip – New York, United States
http://mirrors.node3.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.zip – Amsterdam, Netherlands (2)
http://mirrors.node4.hadrill.org.uk/darkbasic/raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img.zip – Dublin, Ireland
All of these should operate at gigabit speeds and are automatically synced. If you’d like FTP/SCP/other access to this folder, ping me an email and I’ll sort it out for you. This is a more permanent setup, so shouldn’t go down any time soon.
Thank you so much, great work!
Then flash it to your SD with dd:
dd bs=1M if=raspbian_wheezy_20130923.img of=/dev/sdX
This is for linux, how about windows?
The way elinux recommends is using this tool: https://www.sdcard.org/downloads/formatter_4/eula_windows/
See here: http://elinux.org/RPi_Easy_SD_Card_Setup
I hope that helps!!
Jack
Whoops, cancel that!!
http://sourceforge.net/projects/win32diskimager
Insert the SD card into your SD card reader and check what drive letter it was assigned. You can easily see the drive letter (for example G:) by looking in the left column of Windows Explorer. You can use the SD Card slot (if you have one) or a cheap Adapter in a USB slot.
Download the Win32DiskImager utility.
Extract the executable from the zip file and run the Win32DiskImager utility; you may need to run the utility as Administrator! Right-click on the file, and select ‘Run as Administrator’
Select the image file.
Select the drive letter of the SD card in the device box. Be careful to select the correct drive; if you get the wrong one you can destroy your data on the computer’s hard disk! If you are using an SD Card slot in your computer (if you have one) and can’t see the drive in the Win32DiskImager window, try using a cheap adapter in a USB slot.
Click Write and wait for the write to complete.
Exit the imager and eject the SD card.
Thank you very much for your help!
I have succeed to write the image to SD card.
No worries!
Glad I could be of assistance.
Hi,
just a linux newbie here.
Can I use raspi-config on this one or is it incompatible even if I install it with apt-get?
Currently using the official raspberry pi image which is full of unnecessary bloat for me.
My usage just includes Samba, minidlna and transmission which I configure with ssh.
I don’t use the desktop GUI but I might sometime in the future.
Hi, and thanks for info.
I’m new to the pi, and have a few queries: first, how to move swap file ?
And when do I install the other bits, mpd,mpc, mpd-python, pyudev
Firstly – Thanks for this img file – its super useful! As a relative newbie to the Linux and Raspberry Pi scene, i struggled a bit with the expansion of the file system once it had been copied to the flash drive.
To share my experience, / help any others that may have had the same problem – here were my steps:
Download and unzip IMG file
Burn to SD card using ‘Win32DiskImager’
Load into Raspberry Pi
Log in via SSH
run command: “df -h” which gave me the rundown of where my filesystem was, in this case “/dev/mmcblk0p1″
run command: “fdisk /dev/mmblk0″
run commands: “d”, “3”, “d”, “2”, “n”, “p”, “2”, “return”, “return”, “w”
(Breakdown on what that has just done)
d – delete
3 – third partition (in my case, the swap partition)
d – delete
2 – second partition (the root filesystem, 1 is the BOOT partition and shouldn’t be touched)
n – create new partition
p – primary
2 – location
return – confirm start block
return – confirm end block
w – write
run command: “reboot” to reboot the system
run command: “resize2fs /dev/mmcblk0″ to resize the new partition
Done =)
reboot …and you end up with the NOOBS screen…
then what?
Just noticed a few errors in my original post:
run command: “fdisk /dev/mmblk0″
should be: run command: “fdisk /dev/mmcblk0″
– Missing ‘c’ in mmcblk
run command: “resize2fs /dev/mmcblk0″
should be: run command: “resize2fs /dev/mmcblk0p2″
– Missing p2 on the end of the device to resize the correct partition.
In response to you syd – with this distribution after reboot you get back to the login prompt… I’ve not seen any noobs screen on this distribution.
Thank you Dan your steps work like a charm!
Thank you darkbasic for an awesome built.
Man you need to receive more recognition for your work.
Thanks Dan, that worked and was a quick way to extend the size to my 8Gb SD card
But…. I’ve now got no swap file!
And when “top” is saying:
KiB Mem: 123072 total, 40216 used, 82856 free, 5056 buffers
KiB Swap: 0 total, 0 used, 0 free, 18368 cached
That’s not a lot of memory.
Will have to remind myself how to create a swapfile in linux now!!
Actually that was quite easy – well I’m not creating a partition, just a swap file, but..
dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/my_swap bs=1024 count=131072
creates the swapfile
activate right away (if you have to) with:
mkswap -f /var/my_swap
swapon /var/my_swap
but MAIN thing – add to /etc/fstab –
/var/my_swap none swap sw 0 0
reboot and it will remember the swapfile.
If you want to make the swapfile more than 128Mb just change the “count=131072″ to whatever Kb you need.
Slight edit – the mkswap command is essential – you MUST execute that.
Hey Chris, glad it worked out for you =)
Yes my method removes the swap file all together, should have pointed that out really, but i’ve never found that my pi actually uses the swap file at all, so dont have a use or need for it being there.
I guess it depends on what your using the pi for so if you need it, fair do’s.
=)
Now… do I get a Pi B+ or not… hmmm.
May I simply say what a relief to uncover somebody who truly understands
whatt they’re discussing online. You definitely undderstand how too bring a problem to light and make it important.
More and more peoole have to look at this and understand this side of tthe story.
I was surprised that you aren’t more popular given that you surely
have the gift.
Hi guys,
This is a very stupid question that I do not know. I just installed the Darkbasic minimal image in my Rpi, I plugged it into my TV and it boots up perfectly fine but then it asks me for a username and password and I have no clue what it is, any clues guys. What’s the default username and password combo for Darkbasic minimal image..?
Thanks guys
Reading the article will help you 😉
That’s Mean
I see the root password is raspberry, and what’s the username pi or root..? I am sure I have tried them all and it is not working for me, any ideas as to why..?
What’s wrong with “The *root* password is raspberry”?
Default keyboard layout: qwerty. If youre using a qwert keyboard type z for y
This is great, I use it as a basis for pretty much anything Pi related. Thank you
New version: raspbian wheezy 20140701 available
– New kernel.
– New firmware.
– rpi-update
– wireless-tools
– wpa_supplicant
Root password is *not* raspberry. I have verified the keymap.
Did you change it in the last update?
Thanks.
Are you sure? I didn’t change it and I already flashed the new image and it works flawlessly. Can someone else please confirm?
login: root
pw: raspberry
works for me (on the 21040701 file)
Could have been an issue with me specifically, I didn’t verify the hash. But, strange. I ended up installing stock wheezy for now.
Hello,
ist impossible to Login
“Login incorrect”
OK, I see, its the same as with the Questions before.
But I didnt see an Answer:
User: “pi”
PW: “raspberrz” “y” = “z” depend on german keybord
Thank You
B.R.
try ‘root’ for a user, not ‘pi’
I´ve setup another mirror for the images:
https://debianer.puppis.uberspace.de/files/RaspberryPi/ – Frankfurt, Germany
Ping me, if there are any updates 😉
Thanks;)
why still using kernel 3.6.11? the latest are
why still using kernel 3.6.11? the latest are 3.12.24
Since I installed rpi-update I decided to stick with the kernel version it pulls.
first of all when i check the memory usage it doesn’t use 14mb of ram and it thinks i have only 220mb. even though my pi has 520mb ram.
i would like to know how to change the memory split, so i can use as small amount of ram as possible for gpu as it is not needed for a server
gpu_mem_16 in /boot/config.txt: http://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/configuration/config-txt.md
I simply forgot to add it, next version will have gpu_mem_16 by default.
Since peoples kept asking more and more features in the kernel it is possible that latest version uses more than 14MB of ram (the very first version of the image used only 14MB).
ok thanks.
Just one more thing how do you get rid of the long in when plugged in so it auto logs into root. but you still have to login when you access server through putty
I have the same problem with RAM (whats wrong?):
——————————————————————————
#cat /boot/config.txt | grep -v ‘#’
gpu_mem=16
——————————————————————————
./vcgencmd get_mem arm && ./vcgencmd get_mem gpu
arm=240M
gpu=16M
——————————————————————————
#free -m
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 231 37 193 0 4 17
-/+ buffers/cache: 16 215
Swap: 98 0 98
——————————————————————————
#cat /proc/cpuinfo
processor : 0
model name : ARMv6-compatible processor rev 7 (v6l)
Features : swp half thumb fastmult vfp edsp java tls
CPU implementer : 0x41
CPU architecture: 7
CPU variant : 0x0
CPU part : 0xb76
CPU revision : 7
Hardware : BCM2708
Revision : 000e
——————————————————————————
Heyho,
I had the same problem and just called ‘rpi-update’ and let it do his job. It downloaded the newest firmware and after one reboot my raspi allocated the whole 512mb mem. The ‘gpu_mem=16′ has to stay in the config.txt! Evidence: http://imgur.com/AmLGnAl
flo
Awesome. The “rpi-update” to solve this problem. Initially I tried the manual update firmware (also Hexxeh), but without success. Thanks a lot
how to i get rid of the login password on boot
I think the only way to do this is by generating some authentication keys like in this tutorial: http://www.linuxproblem.org/art_9.html
You have to do this for every client you have and with PuttY you have to follow this special way: http://kb.site5.com/shell-access-ssh/how-to-generate-ssh-keys-and-connect-to-your-account-with-putty/
I had no time to test those tutorials but think they will work,
flo
Hi, I think your site mght be having browser compatibility issues.
When I look at your blog sife in Ie,it looks fine but when opening in Internmet Explorer,
it has some overlapping. I just wanted to give you
a quick heads up! Other then that, fantastic blog!
Have a look at my web-site: Whole Body Fitness
Does 20140701 release work correctly with the Pi B+
I think you will need a new firmware, but I already ordered a B+ and I will release a new image before the end of the month.
Just tried 20140701 on the old B
– did an apt-get update, rpi-update, reboot, apt-get update, apt-get upgrade
Put it in the new B+ … boots fine, USB looks good, Ethernet doesn’t come up.
will try noobs to verify it’s not the hardware.
… it’s not the hardware 😐
I already received my B+ and I will upload an updated image in a few days 😉
The present image does work correctly on both the B and the B+ – but as seen as apt-get update, apt-get upgrade is performed – the card will no longer work in the other machine.
Nice job mate!
Hello!
I had problem with install ssmtp package because missing “127.0.0.1 raspberry-pi” in /etc/hosts :).
How u do Hard Float binaries? Send me please some link’s about it :).
Yes fine with the compressed image.
But I don’t want ‘root’ login by default.
Can I set ‘pi’ login with normal user authorities.
Yes fine with the compressed image.
But I don’t want ‘root’ login by default.
Can I set ‘pi’ login with normal user authorities.
[…] Ich habe fuer solche RasPi-Spielereien ein Minimal-Image auf einer 1-GB-SD-Karte (bitte dortige Installations- und Konfigurationsanleitung beachten). Das […]
I’ve installed 20140701
Linux raspberry-pi 3.12.23+ #692 PREEMPT Thu Jun 26 20:15:50 BST 2014 armv6l GNU/Linux
I’ve tried to install splunkforwarder on it (which DOES work on raspbian)
link here: http://www.splunk.com/download/universalforwarder , look for “arm”
I can’t get it to work on 20140701, troubleshooting stuff there:
splunk@pi:~/bin$ ldd splunk
libdl.so.2 => /lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/libdl.so.2 (0xb6ed3000)
libpthread.so.0 => /lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/libpthread.so.0 (0xb6eb4000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/libc.so.6 (0xb6d84000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.3 => /lib/ld-linux-armhf.so.3 (0xb6ee7000)
splunk@pi:~/bin$ objdump -t splunk
splunk: file format elf32-littlearm
it *should* work, I’m guessing the kernel isn’t arm7hl though is the clincher. Could this be the case? and if so, can I just compile a stock 3.12.23 using your config, or do you have some special patches applied?
Cheers.
root@pi:/opt/splunkforwarder/bin# file splunk
splunk: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, ARM, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked (uses shared libs), for GNU/Linux 2.6.26, stripped
root@pi:/opt/splunkforwarder/bin# file /bin/ls
/bin/ls: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, ARM, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked (uses shared libs), for GNU/Linux 2.6.26, BuildID[sha1]=0x7f981e03f231371c5feaaeab28d9e23639e57cd3, stripped
root@pi:/opt/splunkforwarder/bin# ./splunk
-bash: ./splunk: No such file or directory
root@pi:/opt/splunkforwarder/bin# objdump -p splunk
splunk: file format elf32-littlearm
Program Header:
PHDR off 0x00000034 vaddr 0x00008034 paddr 0x00008034 align 2**2
filesz 0x00000120 memsz 0x00000120 flags r–
INTERP off 0x00000154 vaddr 0x00008154 paddr 0x00008154 align 2**0
filesz 0x00000013 memsz 0x00000013 flags r–
LOAD off 0x00000000 vaddr 0x00008000 paddr 0x00008000 align 2**12
filesz 0x0004373c memsz 0x0004373c flags r-x
LOAD off 0x00043740 vaddr 0x0004c740 paddr 0x0004c740 align 2**12
filesz 0x000003d4 memsz 0x00001470 flags rw-
DYNAMIC off 0x00043740 vaddr 0x0004c740 paddr 0x0004c740 align 2**2
filesz 0x000000f8 memsz 0x000000f8 flags rw-
NOTE off 0x00000168 vaddr 0x00008168 paddr 0x00008168 align 2**2
filesz 0x00000020 memsz 0x00000020 flags r–
EH_FRAME off 0x00043734 vaddr 0x0004b734 paddr 0x0004b734 align 2**2
filesz 0x00000008 memsz 0x00000008 flags r–
STACK off 0x00000000 vaddr 0x00000000 paddr 0x00000000 align 2**0
filesz 0x00000000 memsz 0x00000000 flags rw-
0x70000001 off 0x00043728 vaddr 0x0004b728 paddr 0x0004b728 align 2**2
filesz 0x00000008 memsz 0x00000008 flags r–
Dynamic Section:
PLTGOT 0x0004c914
PLTRELSZ 0x000003e8
JMPREL 0x0000de8c
PLTREL 0x00000011
REL 0x0000de64
RELSZ 0x00000028
RELENT 0x00000008
DEBUG 0x00000000
SYMTAB 0x00008188
SYMENT 0x00000010
STRTAB 0x0000a368
STRSZ 0x000025ab
HASH 0x0000c914
NEEDED libdl.so.2
NEEDED libpthread.so.0
NEEDED libc.so.6
INIT 0x0000e274
FINI 0x0003a62c
INIT_ARRAY 0x0004c904
INIT_ARRAYSZ 0x00000004
FINI_ARRAY 0x0004c908
FINI_ARRAYSZ 0x00000004
VERSYM 0x0000d9b8
VERNEED 0x0000ddf4
VERNEEDNUM 0x00000003
Version References:
required from libc.so.6:
0x0d696914 0x00 02 GLIBC_2.4
0x0d696917 0x00 03 GLIBC_2.7
required from libdl.so.2:
0x0d696914 0x00 04 GLIBC_2.4
required from libpthread.so.0:
0x0d696914 0x00 05 GLIBC_2.4
private flags = 5000000: [Version5 EABI]
New version: raspbian wheezy 20140726 available
– New kernel.
– New firmware.
– Works with Raspberry Pi model B+
Could you make one with hardfp?
What do you mean? It *is* hardfp.
Then I’m not certain I understand why splunkforward (see post above) doesn’t work on your wheezy distribution but would work on raspbian; could you point me to the right direction? I’m happy to provide you further information on this.
Updated the image on my server:
https://debianer.puppis.uberspace.de/files/RaspberryPi/ – Frankfurt, Germany
Why I don´t get any update notifications?
Sorry, I simply forgot to send you an e-mail
20140726 version, on mine, network not working, I must edit /etc/network/interfaces manually to set static IP. the SSH can not login, I must edit too /etc/hosts.allow and add one line “ALL”
User Password raspberry pi = logged after you run the following command sudo passwd = you choose a password for root
[…] Ihr findet das Image und seine Installation hier. […]
Will this image support the new Pi B+ model?
Yes it does
Hi,
Thank U for your good work !
Go on.
It works with SSD card 8 Gb.
I’ve got a “small” problem.
The / partition is too short for me : 800 Mb.
How to change it easily ?
Thank U
Guillaume from France
Thanks for this image! I have a problem with ETH communication though, it fails, does not even reply to PING, in version B board. In version A board it works. The regular Wheezy image works in both boards. Anybody else having similar problems?
Can’t find a solution to the above problem. Kern.log almost the same in the two cases (ETH OK / not OK) . In both
Jan 1 02:00:18 rpi1 kernel: [ 3.284011] smsc95xx 1-1.1:1.0 eth0: register ‘smsc95xx’ at usb-bcm2708_usb-1.1, smsc95xx USB 2.0 Ethernet,
But these lines appear only in one kern.log:
Jan 1 02:00:18 rpi1 kernel: [ 16.530638] smsc95xx 1-1.1:1.0 eth0: hardware isn’t capable of remote wakeup
Jan 1 02:00:18 rpi1 kernel: [ 18.081948] smsc95xx 1-1.1:1.0 eth0: link up, 100Mbps, full-duplex, lpa 0x45E1
[…] Raspbian Wheezy armhf Raspberry Pi minimal image […]
Thought I would share my commands to setup this image to be quite similar to a normal Raspbian image
(resize partion, update, configure, sudo, add user, disable root)
## RESIZE PARTION ##
fdisk /dev/mmcblk0
p,d,2,d,3,n,p,2,ENTER,ENTER,w
reboot
resize2fs /dev/mmcblk0p2
reboot
## UPDATE ##
apt-get update
apt-get upgrade
rpi-update
reboot
## CONFIGURE TIMEZONE ##
dpkg-reconfigure tzdata
## CONFIGURE LOCALES ##
## SPACE to select or deselect a locale. ENTER to accept and proceed ##
## it_IT.UTF-8 UTF-8 selected by default. Remember to deselect this if not your locale ##
dpkg-reconfigure locales
## CONFIGURE KEYBOARD ##
## For a standard US Keyboard -> “Select from full list” -> “pc/qwerty/US American/Standard/Standard” ##
dpkg-reconfigure console-data
## ADD SUDO ##
apt-get install sudo
## ADD NEW NON-ROOT USER ##
## Can change username and what groups to add it to. Groups below are same as stock Raspbian groups for pi user ##
adduser pi
usermod -G pi,adm,dialout,cdrom,sudo,audio,video,plugdev,games,users,netdev pi
## SWITCH TO NEW USER ##
su pi
## DISABLE ROOT USER ##
## Just removing the root password ##
## To re-enable, just use the “sudo passwd” command ##
sudo passwd -l root
You should now have an up to date build with a non-root user to play with
Hope this helps some people out
Thx! your post is definitely very useful.
Also, here are instructions to install Raspi-Config
## Add Raspi-Config ##
nano /etc/apt/sources.list
## Add Below Line ##
deb http://archive.raspberrypi.org/debian/ wheezy main
## CTRL X to save ##
wget http://archive.raspberrypi.org/debian/raspberrypi.gpg.key
apt-key add raspberrypi.gpg.key
rm raspberrypi.gpg.key
apt-get update
apt-get install raspi-config
Everything in raspi-config seems to work pretty good except for setting the keyboard
Found how to get keyboard configuration working in raspi-config
apt-get install keyboard-configuration
When building the image, would it be possible to create the partitions in this order:
/boot 50M
swap 100M
/ remainder
That would simplify expansion to fill a bigger card
Thanks
I’m thinking about getting rid of the swap partition and use a file as swap instead. Any objection?
Nope – as long as it still runs,
actually mine is running without using swap – do we need it?
could we have a little script something like ‘addswap.sh’ that
* creates a file to use as swap,
* adds the relevant line to /etc/fstab,
* does a mount -a
(and maybe another script to extend the filesystem to fill the sdcard )
Thanks for this great image, it boots up so fast! I am using for a few days and I’ve managed to do everything I needed. Follows the list of what I’ve done so far:
– Used w1-therm module to capture temperatures from the sensor on giop4.
– Installed rvm and ruby 2.1.2
– Installed Nginx and passenger to run ruby/rails/rack projects (to accomplish this task I had to add 1gb swap file, but later I deleted it)
– played with leds on gpios
– Customized /etc/motd to get a fancy message when logging in through ssh
– Installed Wifi dongle RTL8188CUS
Has anyone managed to get the Pi camera module working on this image?
I have enabled it through raspi-config, but get the following error when running raspistill:
mmal: mmal_vc_component_create: failed to create component ‘vc.ril.camera’ (1:ENOMEM)
mmal: mmal_component_create_core: could not create component ‘vc.ril.camera’ (1)
mmal: Failed to create camera component
mmal: main: Failed to create camera component
mmal: Camera is not enabled in this build. Try running “sudo raspi-config” and ensure that “camera” has been enabled
If anyone has any insight, I’d be very grateful. I love this minimal image.
(Running B+ model, if it makes a difference)
Very nice image. I downloaded it yesterday and now using it on my Pi B model as a headless server.
Installed my Wifi dongle and Aria2 on it.
All seems to work fine.
A small query ? Can we install RPi-Monitor on this ?
I looked at the website – http://rpi-experiences.blogspot.fr/p/rpi-monitor-articles.html.
But I cant seem to find the command line installation steps. I have installed and used Rpi-Monitor on the full blown image of Pi. But that required configuring VNC server (for console) and installing it via pi store.
I want to keep things at minimum and install it via command line. I think it requires Java and HTML5 too. So not sure how to go about it.
Any pointers/suggestions ?
Keep up the good work.
Jab.
it’s all explain right here:
http://rpi-experiences.blogspot.fr/2014/08/rpi-monitor-version-27-is-available.html
work for me.
tx darkbasics and guys for the work. best than moebius distro. goodjob.
[…] 我們使用的映像檔來源是:http://www.linuxsystems.it/raspbian-wheezy-armhf-raspberry-pi-minimal-image/ […]
Thanks goutbulgare for the link.
Worked like a charm.
Does this image include GUI?
Hello, what changes did you make from the 2013 09 23 2014 07 26 img ? with the new img i get bad uart data.
http://www.linuxsystems.it/2014/07/raspbian-wheezy-20140701-available/
interesting and this is on the raspberry-pi B not the B+ right?
This is the second changelog:
http://www.linuxsystems.it/2014/07/raspbian-wheezy-20140726-available/
Alright well with the raspberian wheezy img i get correct data.. i beleive that you are using the same kernel version correct so could the issue i am having be with the configuration ?
Hello, what changes did you make from the 2013 09 23 to the 2014 07 26 img ? with the new img i get bad uart data.
on the raspberry pi b.
Where can I find the kernel incl. sources and/or headers for development ?
root@raspberry-pi:~#uname -a
Linux raspberry-pi 3.12.25+ #700 PREEMPT Thu Jul 24 17:51:46 BST 2014 arm6l GNU/Linux
https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux/